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T8 B18 HQ FAA 1 of 3 FDR - 9-22-01 FAA Situation Report 239

The document provides a situation report from the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) on the operational status of the National Airspace System (NAS) in the aftermath of the September 11th terrorist attacks. It summarizes that (1) all FAA facilities are operational under heightened security conditions, (2) most U.S. airports have been certified as complying with new security directives, and (3) domestic and international flights have resumed with more stringent security procedures for airports and air carriers.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
105 views4 pages

T8 B18 HQ FAA 1 of 3 FDR - 9-22-01 FAA Situation Report 239

The document provides a situation report from the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) on the operational status of the National Airspace System (NAS) in the aftermath of the September 11th terrorist attacks. It summarizes that (1) all FAA facilities are operational under heightened security conditions, (2) most U.S. airports have been certified as complying with new security directives, and (3) domestic and international flights have resumed with more stringent security procedures for airports and air carriers.
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY

U.S. Department 800 Independence Ave., S.W.


Of Transportation Washington, DC 20591
Federal Aviation
Administration

September 22, 2001

Terrorist Attack on U.S.


Situation Report #12
Asof1:OOPMEDT
(Changes in bold)

1. Background. Terrorists commandeered commercial aircraft, crashing two into


the World Trade Center in New York, and one into the Pentagon in Washington DC. A
fourth aircraft crashed south of Pittsburgh after reporting a hijack. American and United
airlines each lost two flights in the air crashes. The four flights carried a total of 266
people - 233 passengers, 25 crewmembers and eight pilots. Domestic and
international flights in U.S. airspace have resumed under more stringent airport and air
carrier security procedures.

2. Operational status. NAS facilities are all fully operational


• All FAA facilities are at Security Condition (SECON) CHARLIE. No FAA-wide
Readiness Level has been set.
• A GENOT was issued by the Administrator detailing restrictions to visitors at FAA
facilities.
• FAA Headquarters Crisis Response Steering Group meetings continue.
• FAA's Headquarters Crisis Response Working Group meetings continue.
• The FAA ATCSCC and ACS officials are continuing to coordinate the resumption
of domestic and international commercial passenger and cargo flights in the U.S.
Domestic and international commercial passenger and cargo flights are being
approved pending certification of the carriers and departure and destination
airports by FAA ACS officials. Non-Canadian foreign air carriers are permitted
to overfly the territorial airspace of the U.S. only after affirming in writing
to their FAA Principal Security Inspector that they will implement the
emergency measures required for overflight authorization.
• Flight Restrictions have been lifted within the Territorial Airspace of the U.S., for
U.S. registered aircraft provided that those operations are conducted outside of
"Enhanced Class B Airspace" with the exceptions detailed below.
The following types of operations are not authorized:
• Civil aircraft VFR flight training operations
• Banner towing operations
• Sight seeing flight operations conducted for compensation or hire (under
Part 91)
• Traffic watch flight operations
• Airship/blimp operations
• News reporting operations

FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY


FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
• Foreign Registry flights are approved for only IFR flights departing the U.S. with
no intermediate stops inside of the U.S.
• FAA Flight Service Stations are providing continual updates on authorization
status via their 800 number at 1-800-WXBRIEF.
• FAA Order 7110.263 was revised to assure immediate notification to NORAD,
ROC, and ATCSCC of a possible hijacking.

3. Part 139 airport status. Airports are being approved for operation upon
certification that new security requirements have been implemented. A list of these
airports is posted on the FAA Intranet at:

http://atcscc.faa.gov/ois/

• Temporary flight restrictions are in force for GA (Part 91) operations for the
airspace around New York's JFK Airport and Washington's Reagan National out
to a radius of 25 miles. In the New York vicinity, all major airports are open to
traffic. Note: there will be no General Aviation (private/corporate) repositioning
flights for Washington's Reagan National(DCA) and Dulles International (IAD) or
New York airports, Teterboro (TEB), JFK, LaGuardia (LGA), Newark (EWR),
Farmingdale (FRG)), or Linden, NJ (LDJ).
• NOTAM FDC 111 has been issued which details emergency air traffic rules in
U.S. controlled airspace. Operations that are referenced in the NOTAM include
Parts 91 (General Operating Rules), 121 (Air Carrier), 125 (Large Aircraft
Operations), 129 (Foreign), 133 (Heavy Lift Helicopter), 135 (Commuter/On
Demand), 137 (Agriculture).
• SFAR No. 90 - Prohibition Against Certain Flights Within the Territory and
Airspace of Afghanistan - has been issued by the FAA. This emergency SFAR
has been issued by NOTAM.
• At the time of this report, of the 455 Part 107 U.S. airports, 454 have been
certified as complying with the emergency security directives. Washington's
Reagan National (DCA) has yet to be certified.
• To date, 98% of the foreign air carrier stations and 95% of commercial flights to
the U.S. are certified to the new security directives. The remaining uncertified air
carrier stations consist primarily of the smaller carriers and those with infrequent
flight schedules. Additional certifications continue to be received.

Ongoing NOTAM Restrictions:


Overflights -Unless specifically authorized by their FAA Principle Security
Inspector, all Non-Canadian Part 129 operators are not to fly over the territorial
airspace of the U.S.
4. Personnel. AHR is tracking information on casualties to FAA employees and
families resulting from the attacks. Numerous FAA employees/families have been
affected.

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FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY

• AHR has issued guidance on relaxed travel policies to assist for onward
movement of employees. A toll-free hotline (1-800-842-8736, ext 34140) has
been established that will be staffed from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., EOT. To date,
the hotline has received 40 calls.
• AHR continues to work numerous pay/work-related issues relative to the recent
events.
• ASO and AMC officials working with ABA have reviewed over 7,000 timecards
that had not been processed by the end of the week and manually entered pay
records in the payroll system to assure payment of all FAA employees.

5. Supplemental information.
• ACS has developed and distributed to all U.S. certificated air carriers and Part
139 airports, and foreign air carriers serving the U.S. enhanced emergency
security directives.
• ACS has developed and distributed to appropriate field personnel procedures for
foreign carrier operations flying over the U.S. Air traffic is expected to issue a
NOTAM on the issuance of these procedures today. Until the NOTAM is
released, overflight authority for 129 carriers will remain limited to U.S. and
Canadian carriers.
• FEMA's Washington-based Emergency Response Team (EST) has fully
activated and on 24-hour operations. All 10 of the FEMA regions - headquartered
in Boston, New York City, Philadelphia, Atlanta, Chicago, Denton, TX, Denver,
San Francisco and Bothell, Wash. - are also fully activated.
• FEMA has activated the Federal Response Plan.
• FEMA has activated its operations center, and is working closely with the FBI's
Strategic Operation Information Center (SOIC). FEMA's SIOC liaison has been
activated.
• ADA-20 has been relieved of its responsibility of providing two staff members to
DOT'S Continuity Of Operations facility.
• The FAA is currently working with the White House and DOD to see if the agency
can get an exemption for those FAA employees in key positions who are in the
Ready Reserve.
• CAPTURING IDEAS AND SUGGESTIONS: The Office of Research and
Acquisition (ARA) has established a system for employees and others to offer
suggestions on improving safety and security. The system consists of an e-mail,
fax, as well as telephone capability. The new e-mail address is 9-
[email protected]. The fax number is 202-267-5091. The telephone
number, which will be staffed Mondays - Fridays, 8:30 a.m. is 1-866-289-9673.
E-mail and fax are preferred.
• ACS is reviewing Federal Air Marshall requirements in light of urgent staffing
requirements.

FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY


FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY

• ASY reports that since the attack last week, its Aviation Safety Hotline has
received over 1000 calls and more than 700 visits to its interactive website.
• DOT has informed all modal administrations that DOT's Crisis Management
Center will remain active for an additional 30 days.

Sources: FAA HQ WOC, ACC, ATCSCC, ANE ROC, AEA ROC, ASO ROC,
DOT/OET, FEMA, NOAA, Media

Authorized for Release:


[SIGNED]

Dan Noel
Manager, Emergency Operations Staff

FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY

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